This document discusses DevOps and the movement towards closer collaboration between development and operations teams. It advocates that operations work should start early in the development process, with developers and operations communicating about non-functional requirements, security, backups, monitoring and more. Both developers and operations staff should aim to automate infrastructure and deployments. The goal is reproducible, reliable deployments of applications and their supporting systems.
A high level introduction to DevOps. Explains what it is, how popular DevOps has become, why DevOps is popular, how DevOps differs from traditional approaches and some next steps to implementation.
Why DevOps?
DevOps principles
DevOps concepts
DevOps practices
DevOps people
DevOps controls
DevOps training and further reading
Where do you start with DevOps?
What is DevOps | DevOps Introduction | DevOps Training | DevOps Tutorial | Ed...Edureka!
***** DevOps Masters Program : https://www.edureka.co/masters-progra... *****
This DevOps tutorial takes you through what is DevOps all about and basic concepts of DevOps and DevOps Tools. This DevOps tutorial is ideal for beginners to get started with DevOps. Check our complete DevOps playlist here: http://goo.gl/O2vo13
DevOps Tutorial Blog Series: https://goo.gl/P0zAfF
This document provides an overview of DevOps including:
- An abstract defining DevOps as a combination of development and operations to promote collaboration between teams.
- An introduction stating that DevOps enables organizations to better serve customers through improved communication between development and operations teams.
- Sections covering the history, definition, need for DevOps, life cycle, architecture, practices, principles, tools, and benefits of adopting a DevOps approach.
This document discusses DevOps, including what it is, why it is used, its history and practices. DevOps combines cultural philosophies and tools to increase an organization's ability to deliver applications and services faster. It involves development and operations teams working together throughout the entire service lifecycle. Key DevOps practices include continuous integration, delivery and deployment; use of microservices; infrastructure as code; monitoring and logging; and communication between teams. The DevOps lifecycle aims to continuously deliver products through automation and monitoring at each stage of development and deployment.
DevOps is a movement to change how IT is done by promoting collaboration between development and operations teams. It aims to reduce waste and improve delivery of software by making development and operations processes more efficient through automation, monitoring, and communication. The DevOps philosophy advocates enhancing software design with operational knowledge, building feedback loops from production into development to improve systems, and fostering a culture of shared responsibility. Key DevOps practices include accelerating the flow of changes to production through continuous integration, delivery, and deployment; adding development practices to operations like automated testing; and empowering developers to do production work to break down barriers between teams. DevOps uses tooling throughout the development and operations process to measure and monitor systems and provide feedback.
This presentation about DevOps will help you understand what is DevOps, how is DevOps different from traditional IT, benefits of DevOps, the lifecycle of DevOps and tools used in DevOps processes. DevOps is one of the most trending IT jobs. It is a collaboration between development and operation teams which enables continuous delivery of applications and services to our end users. However, if you want to become a DevOps engineer, you must have knowledge of various DevOps tools (like Git, Maven, Selenium, Jenkins, Docker, Ansible, Nagios etc.) to achieve automation at each stage which helps in gaining Continuous Development, Continuous Integration, Continuous Testing and Continuous Monitoring in order to deliver a quality product to the client at a very fast pace. Now, let us get started and understand DevOps and does the various DevOps tools work.
Below are the topics explained in this DevOps presentation:
1. What is DevOps?
2. Benefits of DevOps
3. Lifecycle of DevOps
4. Tools in DevOps
Why learn DevOps?
Simplilearn’s DevOps training course is designed to help you become a DevOps practitioner and apply the latest in DevOps methodology to automate your software development lifecycle right out of the class. You will master configuration management; continuous integration deployment, delivery, and monitoring using DevOps tools such as Git, Docker, Jenkins, Puppet, and Nagios in a practical, hands-on and interactive approach. The DevOps training course focuses heavily on the use of Docker containers, a technology that is revolutionizing the way apps are deployed in the cloud today and is a critical skillset to master in the cloud age.
After completing the DevOps training course you will achieve hands-on expertise in various aspects of the DevOps delivery model. The practical learning outcomes of this Devops training course are:
An understanding of DevOps and the modern DevOps toolsets
The ability to automate all aspects of a modern code delivery and deployment pipeline using:
1. Source code management tools
2. Build tools
3. Test automation tools
4. Containerization through Docker
5. Configuration management tools
6. Monitoring tools
Who should take this course?
DevOps career opportunities are thriving worldwide. DevOps was featured as one of the 11 best jobs in America for 2017, according to CBS News, and data from Payscale.com shows that DevOps Managers earn as much as $122,234 per year, with DevOps engineers making as much as $151,461. DevOps jobs are the third-highest tech role ranked by employer demand on Indeed.com but have the second-highest talent deficit.
1. This DevOps training course will be of benefit the following professional roles:
2. Software Developers
3. Technical Project Managers
4. Architects
5. Operations Support
6. Deployment engineers
7. IT managers
8. Development managers
Learn more at https://www.simplilearn.com/cloud-computing/devops-practitioner-certification-training
DevOps is an increasingly useful tool for achieving business objectives, enabling your teams to work together to improve the efficiency and quality of software delivery. However, despite its growing popularity, there is still a lack of clarity over what DevOps actually means, how organizations should do it and what's the best way to get started.
DevOps 101 takes a brief look at the history of DevOps, why it started, what problems it is intended to solve and how you can start implementing it.
The slides were delivered by James Betteley, Head of Education at the DevOpsGuys in a one-hour webinar. The full recording is available here - https://youtu.be/4gC3WpbetKs?t=2s
James has spent the last few years neck-deep in the world of DevOps transformation, helping a wide range of organizations optimize the way they collaborate to deliver better software, faster. James was joined by Elizabeth Ayer, Portfolio Manager, from Redgate Software. Elizabeth looks after a range of Redgate products that help teams extend their DevOps practices to SQL Server databases.
For more information visit www.devopsguys.com and www.red-gate.com
EduXFactor presents to you a comprehensive up-to-date DevOps certification program. This course will empower you with job-relevant skills and power you ahead in your career.
With this course, master various aspects of software development, operations, continuous integration, continuous delivery, automated configuration management, test, and deployment using DevOps tools like Git, Docker, Jenkins, Ansible, Kubernetes, Puppet & Nagios..
Packed with hands-on exercise for every module, this course is suitable for software developers, technical project managers, architects, operations support, deployment engineers, IT managers, and development managers.
DevOps is a software engineering culture and practice that aims to unify software development (Dev) and software operation (Ops) teams. The main goals of DevOps are to achieve shorter development cycles, increased deployment frequency, and more dependable releases that are closely aligned with business objectives. DevOps advocates for the automation and monitoring of all steps in the software development process, from integration and testing through release, deployment, and infrastructure management.
This document provides an introduction to DevOps fundamentals and principles. It discusses how DevOps aims to improve collaboration between development and operations teams. It notes that DevOps was being adopted more by development teams initially. It also highlights some of the business costs of bugs and issues in production environments, and how DevOps can help improve efficiency, reduce costs, and accelerate business agility.
1) The document provides an overview of DevOps, discussing current business problems like slow releases and downtime that DevOps aims to address.
2) It defines DevOps as a set of practices emphasizing collaboration between development and IT to automate software delivery and infrastructure changes.
3) Key DevOps concepts discussed include continuous integration, continuous delivery, infrastructure as code, and improving communication between teams.
Patrick Debois coined the term "DevOps" in 2009 by combining "development" and "operations" to refer to a collaborative way for software teams to develop and deploy applications. DevOps stresses communication between developers and IT operations and utilizes automation. It involves planning, creating, verifying, packaging, releasing, configuring and monitoring software. While DevOps is a cultural practice, cloud computing utilizes remote servers accessed over the internet and DevOps principles support development and deployment in the cloud.
The document discusses the roles and relationships between development (Dev) and operations (Ops) teams, and introduces the DevOps approach. It notes that traditionally there has been a disconnect between Devs and Ops that results in inefficiencies. DevOps aims to bridge this gap through a collaborative mindset and practices like automating infrastructure provisioning and deployments, implementing continuous integration/delivery, monitoring metrics, and breaking down silos between teams. Specific tools mentioned that support DevOps include Puppet for configuration management and Autobahn for continuous deployment.
Introduction to DevOps covering:
- Why DevOps
- How to build DevOps Teams in your organization
- Cloud Tools you can use for DevOps (Azure and AWS)
- Legacy Software and DevOps
- What is the Future of DevOps
- People to Follow
DevOps combines software development and IT operations to shorten the development lifecycle while allowing for frequent, close-aligned releases with business objectives. It uses toolchains across coding, building, testing, packaging, releasing, configuring, and monitoring. Key principles include incorporating business needs, decomposing user stories methodically, and using clouds to improve computing. DevOps emerged from agile methodology and blends development and operations roles. Career paths can begin as system administrators who gain programming skills or developers who learn operations processes.
This document provides information about the DevOps Foundation certification course. It begins with an introduction to DevOps and why it is important for organizations. It then describes the DevOps Foundation course, which provides 16 hours of foundational knowledge on DevOps principles, practices, culture and automation. The course benefits include being comprehensive, holistic, interactive and helping organizations create a common understanding, identify opportunities and lay a foundation for further education.
Showcase development processes and methods with our content ready Devops PowerPoint Presentation Slide. Focus on rapid application delivery using our visually appealing development and operations PPT visuals. The operating system PowerPoint complete deck comprises self-explanatory and editable PowerPoint templates such as need for DevOps, best practices, criteria for choosing a pilot project, DevOps goals, timeline for DevOps transformation, current state future state, 30-60-90 day plan, roadmap for DevOps, transformation post successful DevOps Implementation, RACI matrix, dashboard to name a few. Users can easily customize all the templates as per their specific project needs. Furthermore, you can also use this IT operations management presentation deck to encourage your team to adopt DevOps culture practices and tools. Demonstrate DevOps goals like Increase automation and standardize the process, reduce cost effort & time to market and so on. Download our system development lifecycle PowerPoint templates to present ways to make improved products faster for greater client satisfaction. Handle deficiencies with our DevOps Powerpoint Presentation Slides. Initiate action to acquire desired assets. https://bit.ly/3y8q8NC
DevOps, sibling of Agile is born of the need to improve IT service delivery agility to the more stable environment.
DevOps movement emphasizes tearing the boundaries between makers (Development) & caretakers (Operations) of IT services/products.
The document provides an introduction to DevOps, including definitions of DevOps, the DevOps lifecycle, principles of DevOps, and why DevOps is needed. DevOps is a culture that promotes collaboration between development and operations teams to deploy code to production faster and more reliably through automation. The DevOps lifecycle includes development, testing, integration, deployment, and monitoring phases. Key principles are customer focus, shared responsibility, continuous improvement, automation, collaboration, and monitoring. DevOps aims to streamline software delivery, improve predictability, and reduce costs.
DevOps Training | DevOps Training Video | DevOps Tools | DevOps Tutorial For ...Simplilearn
This presentation about DevOps will help you learn what is DevOps, the lifecycle of DevOps, different tools used in DevOps life cycle, version control system, continuous integration, and deployment. You will also understand how DevOps performs configuration management, containerization and continuous monitoring of applications. DevOps is a culture that allows the Development and Operations team to work together. In this video, you will see how an organization can use DevOps tools and techniques to build a website. Finally, you will implement Git, Jenkins, and Puppet and gain hands-on experience in it. Now, let us get started with DevOps training.
Below topics are explained in this DevOps training Video:
1. What is DevOps?
2. DevOps Lifecycle
3. DevOps Tools
4. Version Control System
5. CI/CD
6. Configuration Management
7. Containerization
8. Monitoring
Why learn DevOps?
Simplilearn’s DevOps training course is designed to help you become a DevOps practitioner and apply the latest in DevOps methodology to automate your software development lifecycle right out of the class. You will master configuration management; continuous integration deployment, delivery, and monitoring using DevOps tools such as Git, Docker, Jenkins, Puppet, and Nagios in a practical, hands-on and interactive approach. The DevOps training course focuses heavily on the use of Docker containers, a technology that is revolutionizing the way apps are deployed in the cloud today and is a critical skillset to master in the cloud age.
After completing the DevOps training course you will achieve hands-on expertise in various aspects of the DevOps delivery model. The practical learning outcomes of this Devops training course are:
An understanding of DevOps and the modern DevOps toolsets
The ability to automate all aspects of a modern code delivery and deployment pipeline using:
1. Source code management tools
2. Build tools
3. Test automation tools
4. Containerization through Docker
5. Configuration management tools
6. Monitoring tools
Who should take this course?
DevOps career opportunities are thriving worldwide. DevOps was featured as one of the 11 best jobs in America for 2017, according to CBS News, and data from Payscale.com shows that DevOps Managers earn as much as $122,234 per year, with DevOps engineers making as much as $151,461. DevOps jobs are the third-highest tech role ranked by employer demand on Indeed.com but have the second-highest talent deficit.
1. This DevOps training course will be of benefit the following professional roles:
2. Software Developers
3. Technical Project Managers
4. Architects
5. Operations Support
6. Deployment engineers
7. IT managers
8. Development managers
Learn more at https://www.simplilearn.com/cloud-computing/devops-practitioner-certification-training
This document provides an overview of DevOps, including definitions, principles, challenges, and how DevOps addresses issues with traditional development models. Some key points covered include:
- DevOps aims to unify development and operations teams to accelerate delivery through a collaborative culture, automation, measurement, and sharing.
- Traditional models caused bottlenecks due to lack of alignment between teams. DevOps breaks down silos and improves coordination.
- DevOps follows a continuous development lifecycle using practices like continuous integration, delivery, and deployment.
- Automation, infrastructure as code, containers, and cloud platforms help optimize the development and deployment process in DevOps.
DevOps is a set of practices intended to reduce the time between committing a change to a system and deploying it to production while ensuring high quality. It focuses on bridging the gap between developers and operations teams. Key DevOps principles include systems thinking, amplifying feedback loops, and a culture of experimentation. DevOps aims to achieve continuous delivery through practices like automated deployments, infrastructure as code, and deployment strategies like blue-green deployments and rolling upgrades.
The document discusses implementing a DevOps culture at an organization. It covers defining standard tools and processes, educating employees, and establishing continuous integration and delivery (CI/CD) pipelines. The key steps are to start with test-driven development, implement version control and code reviews, define roles and responsibilities, and set up build, deployment, and automated testing processes for development, QA, and production environments. Infrastructure should also be managed as code. Implementing these changes will help transition the organization to more agile, collaborative ways of working.
What Is DevOps? | Introduction To DevOps | DevOps Tools | DevOps Tutorial | D...Edureka!
In this Edureka Devops tutorial, you will learn what is DevOps, and why it is the most efficient software development methodology today. The following topics have been covered in this tutorial:
1. Software Development Challenges
2. How Does DevOps Minimize Challenges?
3. DevOps Tools & Techniques
4. Demand For DevOps Engineers
The document provides an overview and introduction to DevOps. It defines DevOps as synchronizing development and operations teams to efficiently develop and deploy applications through communication, integration, collaboration and automation. Some key benefits of DevOps include more agility, increased quality, boosted innovation and reduced failures. The document also discusses DevOps in comparison to Agile methodology, common DevOps myths, DevOps maturity models, and provides an example Azure DevOps demo.
Agile and DevOps are two software development industry heroes who have altered the way software applications are released. Explore its history, how they are related, and its distinguishing features.
This presentation about DevOps will help you understand what is DevOps, how is DevOps different from traditional IT, benefits of DevOps, the lifecycle of DevOps and tools used in DevOps processes. DevOps is one of the most trending IT jobs. It is a collaboration between development and operation teams which enables continuous delivery of applications and services to our end users. However, if you want to become a DevOps engineer, you must have knowledge of various DevOps tools (like Git, Maven, Selenium, Jenkins, Docker, Ansible, Nagios etc.) to achieve automation at each stage which helps in gaining Continuous Development, Continuous Integration, Continuous Testing and Continuous Monitoring in order to deliver a quality product to the client at a very fast pace. Now, let us get started and understand DevOps and does the various DevOps tools work.
Below are the topics explained in this DevOps presentation:
1. What is DevOps?
2. Benefits of DevOps
3. Lifecycle of DevOps
4. Tools in DevOps
Why learn DevOps?
Simplilearn’s DevOps training course is designed to help you become a DevOps practitioner and apply the latest in DevOps methodology to automate your software development lifecycle right out of the class. You will master configuration management; continuous integration deployment, delivery, and monitoring using DevOps tools such as Git, Docker, Jenkins, Puppet, and Nagios in a practical, hands-on and interactive approach. The DevOps training course focuses heavily on the use of Docker containers, a technology that is revolutionizing the way apps are deployed in the cloud today and is a critical skillset to master in the cloud age.
After completing the DevOps training course you will achieve hands-on expertise in various aspects of the DevOps delivery model. The practical learning outcomes of this Devops training course are:
An understanding of DevOps and the modern DevOps toolsets
The ability to automate all aspects of a modern code delivery and deployment pipeline using:
1. Source code management tools
2. Build tools
3. Test automation tools
4. Containerization through Docker
5. Configuration management tools
6. Monitoring tools
Who should take this course?
DevOps career opportunities are thriving worldwide. DevOps was featured as one of the 11 best jobs in America for 2017, according to CBS News, and data from Payscale.com shows that DevOps Managers earn as much as $122,234 per year, with DevOps engineers making as much as $151,461. DevOps jobs are the third-highest tech role ranked by employer demand on Indeed.com but have the second-highest talent deficit.
1. This DevOps training course will be of benefit the following professional roles:
2. Software Developers
3. Technical Project Managers
4. Architects
5. Operations Support
6. Deployment engineers
7. IT managers
8. Development managers
Learn more at https://www.simplilearn.com/cloud-computing/devops-practitioner-certification-training
DevOps is an increasingly useful tool for achieving business objectives, enabling your teams to work together to improve the efficiency and quality of software delivery. However, despite its growing popularity, there is still a lack of clarity over what DevOps actually means, how organizations should do it and what's the best way to get started.
DevOps 101 takes a brief look at the history of DevOps, why it started, what problems it is intended to solve and how you can start implementing it.
The slides were delivered by James Betteley, Head of Education at the DevOpsGuys in a one-hour webinar. The full recording is available here - https://youtu.be/4gC3WpbetKs?t=2s
James has spent the last few years neck-deep in the world of DevOps transformation, helping a wide range of organizations optimize the way they collaborate to deliver better software, faster. James was joined by Elizabeth Ayer, Portfolio Manager, from Redgate Software. Elizabeth looks after a range of Redgate products that help teams extend their DevOps practices to SQL Server databases.
For more information visit www.devopsguys.com and www.red-gate.com
EduXFactor presents to you a comprehensive up-to-date DevOps certification program. This course will empower you with job-relevant skills and power you ahead in your career.
With this course, master various aspects of software development, operations, continuous integration, continuous delivery, automated configuration management, test, and deployment using DevOps tools like Git, Docker, Jenkins, Ansible, Kubernetes, Puppet & Nagios..
Packed with hands-on exercise for every module, this course is suitable for software developers, technical project managers, architects, operations support, deployment engineers, IT managers, and development managers.
DevOps is a software engineering culture and practice that aims to unify software development (Dev) and software operation (Ops) teams. The main goals of DevOps are to achieve shorter development cycles, increased deployment frequency, and more dependable releases that are closely aligned with business objectives. DevOps advocates for the automation and monitoring of all steps in the software development process, from integration and testing through release, deployment, and infrastructure management.
This document provides an introduction to DevOps fundamentals and principles. It discusses how DevOps aims to improve collaboration between development and operations teams. It notes that DevOps was being adopted more by development teams initially. It also highlights some of the business costs of bugs and issues in production environments, and how DevOps can help improve efficiency, reduce costs, and accelerate business agility.
1) The document provides an overview of DevOps, discussing current business problems like slow releases and downtime that DevOps aims to address.
2) It defines DevOps as a set of practices emphasizing collaboration between development and IT to automate software delivery and infrastructure changes.
3) Key DevOps concepts discussed include continuous integration, continuous delivery, infrastructure as code, and improving communication between teams.
Patrick Debois coined the term "DevOps" in 2009 by combining "development" and "operations" to refer to a collaborative way for software teams to develop and deploy applications. DevOps stresses communication between developers and IT operations and utilizes automation. It involves planning, creating, verifying, packaging, releasing, configuring and monitoring software. While DevOps is a cultural practice, cloud computing utilizes remote servers accessed over the internet and DevOps principles support development and deployment in the cloud.
The document discusses the roles and relationships between development (Dev) and operations (Ops) teams, and introduces the DevOps approach. It notes that traditionally there has been a disconnect between Devs and Ops that results in inefficiencies. DevOps aims to bridge this gap through a collaborative mindset and practices like automating infrastructure provisioning and deployments, implementing continuous integration/delivery, monitoring metrics, and breaking down silos between teams. Specific tools mentioned that support DevOps include Puppet for configuration management and Autobahn for continuous deployment.
Introduction to DevOps covering:
- Why DevOps
- How to build DevOps Teams in your organization
- Cloud Tools you can use for DevOps (Azure and AWS)
- Legacy Software and DevOps
- What is the Future of DevOps
- People to Follow
DevOps combines software development and IT operations to shorten the development lifecycle while allowing for frequent, close-aligned releases with business objectives. It uses toolchains across coding, building, testing, packaging, releasing, configuring, and monitoring. Key principles include incorporating business needs, decomposing user stories methodically, and using clouds to improve computing. DevOps emerged from agile methodology and blends development and operations roles. Career paths can begin as system administrators who gain programming skills or developers who learn operations processes.
This document provides information about the DevOps Foundation certification course. It begins with an introduction to DevOps and why it is important for organizations. It then describes the DevOps Foundation course, which provides 16 hours of foundational knowledge on DevOps principles, practices, culture and automation. The course benefits include being comprehensive, holistic, interactive and helping organizations create a common understanding, identify opportunities and lay a foundation for further education.
Showcase development processes and methods with our content ready Devops PowerPoint Presentation Slide. Focus on rapid application delivery using our visually appealing development and operations PPT visuals. The operating system PowerPoint complete deck comprises self-explanatory and editable PowerPoint templates such as need for DevOps, best practices, criteria for choosing a pilot project, DevOps goals, timeline for DevOps transformation, current state future state, 30-60-90 day plan, roadmap for DevOps, transformation post successful DevOps Implementation, RACI matrix, dashboard to name a few. Users can easily customize all the templates as per their specific project needs. Furthermore, you can also use this IT operations management presentation deck to encourage your team to adopt DevOps culture practices and tools. Demonstrate DevOps goals like Increase automation and standardize the process, reduce cost effort & time to market and so on. Download our system development lifecycle PowerPoint templates to present ways to make improved products faster for greater client satisfaction. Handle deficiencies with our DevOps Powerpoint Presentation Slides. Initiate action to acquire desired assets. https://bit.ly/3y8q8NC
DevOps, sibling of Agile is born of the need to improve IT service delivery agility to the more stable environment.
DevOps movement emphasizes tearing the boundaries between makers (Development) & caretakers (Operations) of IT services/products.
The document provides an introduction to DevOps, including definitions of DevOps, the DevOps lifecycle, principles of DevOps, and why DevOps is needed. DevOps is a culture that promotes collaboration between development and operations teams to deploy code to production faster and more reliably through automation. The DevOps lifecycle includes development, testing, integration, deployment, and monitoring phases. Key principles are customer focus, shared responsibility, continuous improvement, automation, collaboration, and monitoring. DevOps aims to streamline software delivery, improve predictability, and reduce costs.
DevOps Training | DevOps Training Video | DevOps Tools | DevOps Tutorial For ...Simplilearn
This presentation about DevOps will help you learn what is DevOps, the lifecycle of DevOps, different tools used in DevOps life cycle, version control system, continuous integration, and deployment. You will also understand how DevOps performs configuration management, containerization and continuous monitoring of applications. DevOps is a culture that allows the Development and Operations team to work together. In this video, you will see how an organization can use DevOps tools and techniques to build a website. Finally, you will implement Git, Jenkins, and Puppet and gain hands-on experience in it. Now, let us get started with DevOps training.
Below topics are explained in this DevOps training Video:
1. What is DevOps?
2. DevOps Lifecycle
3. DevOps Tools
4. Version Control System
5. CI/CD
6. Configuration Management
7. Containerization
8. Monitoring
Why learn DevOps?
Simplilearn’s DevOps training course is designed to help you become a DevOps practitioner and apply the latest in DevOps methodology to automate your software development lifecycle right out of the class. You will master configuration management; continuous integration deployment, delivery, and monitoring using DevOps tools such as Git, Docker, Jenkins, Puppet, and Nagios in a practical, hands-on and interactive approach. The DevOps training course focuses heavily on the use of Docker containers, a technology that is revolutionizing the way apps are deployed in the cloud today and is a critical skillset to master in the cloud age.
After completing the DevOps training course you will achieve hands-on expertise in various aspects of the DevOps delivery model. The practical learning outcomes of this Devops training course are:
An understanding of DevOps and the modern DevOps toolsets
The ability to automate all aspects of a modern code delivery and deployment pipeline using:
1. Source code management tools
2. Build tools
3. Test automation tools
4. Containerization through Docker
5. Configuration management tools
6. Monitoring tools
Who should take this course?
DevOps career opportunities are thriving worldwide. DevOps was featured as one of the 11 best jobs in America for 2017, according to CBS News, and data from Payscale.com shows that DevOps Managers earn as much as $122,234 per year, with DevOps engineers making as much as $151,461. DevOps jobs are the third-highest tech role ranked by employer demand on Indeed.com but have the second-highest talent deficit.
1. This DevOps training course will be of benefit the following professional roles:
2. Software Developers
3. Technical Project Managers
4. Architects
5. Operations Support
6. Deployment engineers
7. IT managers
8. Development managers
Learn more at https://www.simplilearn.com/cloud-computing/devops-practitioner-certification-training
This document provides an overview of DevOps, including definitions, principles, challenges, and how DevOps addresses issues with traditional development models. Some key points covered include:
- DevOps aims to unify development and operations teams to accelerate delivery through a collaborative culture, automation, measurement, and sharing.
- Traditional models caused bottlenecks due to lack of alignment between teams. DevOps breaks down silos and improves coordination.
- DevOps follows a continuous development lifecycle using practices like continuous integration, delivery, and deployment.
- Automation, infrastructure as code, containers, and cloud platforms help optimize the development and deployment process in DevOps.
DevOps is a set of practices intended to reduce the time between committing a change to a system and deploying it to production while ensuring high quality. It focuses on bridging the gap between developers and operations teams. Key DevOps principles include systems thinking, amplifying feedback loops, and a culture of experimentation. DevOps aims to achieve continuous delivery through practices like automated deployments, infrastructure as code, and deployment strategies like blue-green deployments and rolling upgrades.
The document discusses implementing a DevOps culture at an organization. It covers defining standard tools and processes, educating employees, and establishing continuous integration and delivery (CI/CD) pipelines. The key steps are to start with test-driven development, implement version control and code reviews, define roles and responsibilities, and set up build, deployment, and automated testing processes for development, QA, and production environments. Infrastructure should also be managed as code. Implementing these changes will help transition the organization to more agile, collaborative ways of working.
What Is DevOps? | Introduction To DevOps | DevOps Tools | DevOps Tutorial | D...Edureka!
In this Edureka Devops tutorial, you will learn what is DevOps, and why it is the most efficient software development methodology today. The following topics have been covered in this tutorial:
1. Software Development Challenges
2. How Does DevOps Minimize Challenges?
3. DevOps Tools & Techniques
4. Demand For DevOps Engineers
The document provides an overview and introduction to DevOps. It defines DevOps as synchronizing development and operations teams to efficiently develop and deploy applications through communication, integration, collaboration and automation. Some key benefits of DevOps include more agility, increased quality, boosted innovation and reduced failures. The document also discusses DevOps in comparison to Agile methodology, common DevOps myths, DevOps maturity models, and provides an example Azure DevOps demo.
Agile and DevOps are two software development industry heroes who have altered the way software applications are released. Explore its history, how they are related, and its distinguishing features.
DevOps is a one-stop solution for all software engineering. From creating the software to implementing it in real-time, DevOps does all. This creates an infinite demand for excellent DevOps developers in the market. Since the platform is quite fast and effective, it is attracting the attention of many organizations that are looking to develop a software solution for their own business. Thus, here are a few DevOps interview questions that can help you crack an interview.
DevOps is a culture which promotes collaboration between Development and Operations teams to deploy code to production faster in an automated and repeatable way. Before DevOps, development and operations teams worked in isolation, with manual code deployment leading to errors and a lack of communication between teams. DevOps improves this process by having operations teams work closely with developers to accurately plan infrastructure needs and monitoring, and deploy code collaboratively and on schedule.
DevOps Culture transformation in Modern Software DeliveryNajib Radzuan
DevOps culture aims to shorten development cycles and enable continuous delivery of software through practices that combine software development and IT operations. This presentation discusses how digital transformation requires changes to applications, infrastructure, and processes. It defines DevOps and outlines the DevOps process and tools used. Challenges of adopting DevOps culture include overcoming resistance to change and lack of collaboration between teams. The benefits of DevOps include rapid innovation, faster time-to-market, and improved customer focus. Adopting DevOps requires improving skills, evaluating processes and tools, and starting with small changes.
DevOps is a concept that includes, among other things, software development, operations, and services. DevOps is a blend of “development” and “operations.” It focuses on interaction, coordination, and integration between software developers and IT operations staff. If you are among the companies having requirements for hire DevOps engineer, Here is a detailed guide to hire DevOps engineer.
The document discusses testing in a DevOps environment. It defines DevOps as combining development and operations to quickly deploy applications. Key aspects of DevOps include automating processes, breaking down silos between teams, and continuous integration and deployment. The document also outlines the roles of test automation engineers in DevOps, which includes automating test cases to support frequent code deployments and collaborating closely with development and operations teams.
DevOps is a combination of software development (Dev) and IT operations (Ops). It promotes collaboration between development and operations teams to deploy code to production faster through automation. Some key benefits of DevOps include increased speed of application delivery, improved quality, reduced risk, and cost efficiency. The DevOps lifecycle involves development, integration, testing, feedback, deployment, monitoring, and operations. DevOps architecture aims to reduce the gap between development and operations by having both teams work collaboratively through the entire application lifecycle.
Many entrepreneurs consider DevOps solutions useful for startups and technology companies. The reason behind this notion is the chief objective of DevOps implementation, which is to help companies build their culture or establish cloud-native roots. However, the reality is completely different! Best practices in DevOps are beneficial for all enterprises irrespective of their sizes.
Read the full article - https://www.silvertouch.com/blog/enterprise-devops-importance-and-key-benefits-you-need-to-know/
DevOps Torino Meetup Group Kickoff Meeting - Why a meetup group on DevOps, wh...Rauno De Pasquale
Torino DevOps Meetup Group - Culture, Processes and Tools.
There is a lot of talking about DevOps culture and practices with different point of views and a lot of misunderstandings. This group aims to create a point of discussion to share experience, analysis and thoughts to help each us to better understand and implement DevOps approaches into our way of working in the Digital Services.
Si parla molto di DevOps ma rimane molta confusione circa il significato del termine, ci sono molti punti di vista diversi e anche diversi fraintendimenti. Questo gruppo si prefigge lo scopo di diventare un punto di aggregazione per condividere esperienze, studi e pensieri circa la cultura e le pratiche DevOps per poter giungere insieme a una migliore comprensione che ci possa aiutare a portare questo approccio nel nostro lavoro in ambito IT.
Greens Technology provides DevOps training and certification in Chennai to professionals and corporates on Deployment and automation using devops tools - Chef, Docker, Puppet, Ansible, Nagios, Git, TestNG, SonarQube, Jenkins, and Project Object Model (POM) in Maven.
Are you a:
- University student or fresh graduate wishing to pursue a career in DevOps and want to prepare for it?
- Software Engineer (developer, tester, etc.) who is curious about DevOps?
- Software Engineer (developer, tester, etc.) wishing to switch from his/her current role to a DevOps related role?
This session is just for you!
Check out the video on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yYWEOdORH40
DevOps is the combination of cultural philosophies, practices, and tools that increases an organization's ability to deliver applications and services at high velocity: evolving and improving products at a faster pace than organizations using traditional software development and infrastructure management processes.
This document discusses DevOps training provided by QA. It begins by outlining some of the main benefits of DevOps such as faster software delivery, better application quality, and stronger competitive advantages. It then discusses that DevOps requires cultural change and provides training for roles across the software development process. QA offers a variety of courses focused on DevOps tools, strategies, and supporting Agile skills. Their training is delivered by experienced instructors and includes hands-on learning. QA also has partnerships with vendors to provide relevant skills training. A range of solutions are available depending on an organization's specific DevOps needs and goals.
This document discusses DevOps training provided by QA. It begins by outlining some of the main benefits of DevOps such as faster software delivery, better application quality, and stronger competitive advantages. It then discusses that DevOps requires cultural change and provides training for roles across the software development process. QA offers a variety of courses focused on DevOps tools, strategies, and supporting Agile skills. Their training is delivered by experienced instructors and includes hands-on learning. QA also has partnerships with vendors to provide relevant skills training. A range of DevOps training solutions are available tailored to different needs.
DevOps is a concept that aims to break down silos between development and operations teams to improve software delivery. It focuses on communication, collaboration, and integrating the development and management of infrastructure, operations, and applications. The document provides an overview of DevOps, explaining its goals and benefits. It also outlines the key components of a DevOps process, including continuous integration, continuous delivery, configuration management, monitoring, and various tools used to support each part of the software development lifecycle.
DevOps is a combination of cultural philosophies, practices, and tools that increases an organization's ability to deliver applications and services at high velocity. The DevOps lifecycle includes seven phases: continuous development, continuous integration, continuous testing, continuous delivery, continuous deployment, continuous monitoring, and continuous feedback. Continuous integration involves committing code changes frequently and building and testing the code continuously to identify problems early.
Analysis of reinforced concrete deep beam is based on simplified approximate method due to the complexity of the exact analysis. The complexity is due to a number of parameters affecting its response. To evaluate some of this parameters, finite element study of the structural behavior of the reinforced self-compacting concrete deep beam was carried out using Abaqus finite element modeling tool. The model was validated against experimental data from the literature. The parametric effects of varied concrete compressive strength, vertical web reinforcement ratio and horizontal web reinforcement ratio on the beam were tested on eight (8) different specimens under four points loads. The results of the validation work showed good agreement with the experimental studies. The parametric study revealed that the concrete compressive strength most significantly influenced the specimens’ response with the average of 41.1% and 49 % increment in the diagonal cracking and ultimate load respectively due to doubling of concrete compressive strength. Although the increase in horizontal web reinforcement ratio from 0.31 % to 0.63 % lead to average of 6.24 % increment on the diagonal cracking load, it does not influence the ultimate strength and the load-deflection response of the beams. Similar variation in vertical web reinforcement ratio leads to an average of 2.4 % and 15 % increment in cracking and ultimate load respectively with no appreciable effect on the load-deflection response.
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Join us for an exciting #BuildWithAi workshop on the 28th of April, 2025 at the Google Office in Munich!
Dive into the world of AI with our "Introduction to Vertex AI" session, presented by Google Cloud expert Randy Gupta.
Fluid mechanics is the branch of physics concerned with the mechanics of fluids (liquids, gases, and plasmas) and the forces on them. Originally applied to water (hydromechanics), it found applications in a wide range of disciplines, including mechanical, aerospace, civil, chemical, and biomedical engineering, as well as geophysics, oceanography, meteorology, astrophysics, and biology.
It can be divided into fluid statics, the study of various fluids at rest, and fluid dynamics.
Fluid statics, also known as hydrostatics, is the study of fluids at rest, specifically when there's no relative motion between fluid particles. It focuses on the conditions under which fluids are in stable equilibrium and doesn't involve fluid motion.
Fluid kinematics is the branch of fluid mechanics that focuses on describing and analyzing the motion of fluids, such as liquids and gases, without considering the forces that cause the motion. It deals with the geometrical and temporal aspects of fluid flow, including velocity and acceleration. Fluid dynamics, on the other hand, considers the forces acting on the fluid.
Fluid dynamics is the study of the effect of forces on fluid motion. It is a branch of continuum mechanics, a subject which models matter without using the information that it is made out of atoms; that is, it models matter from a macroscopic viewpoint rather than from microscopic.
Fluid mechanics, especially fluid dynamics, is an active field of research, typically mathematically complex. Many problems are partly or wholly unsolved and are best addressed by numerical methods, typically using computers. A modern discipline, called computational fluid dynamics (CFD), is devoted to this approach. Particle image velocimetry, an experimental method for visualizing and analyzing fluid flow, also takes advantage of the highly visual nature of fluid flow.
Fundamentally, every fluid mechanical system is assumed to obey the basic laws :
Conservation of mass
Conservation of energy
Conservation of momentum
The continuum assumption
For example, the assumption that mass is conserved means that for any fixed control volume (for example, a spherical volume)—enclosed by a control surface—the rate of change of the mass contained in that volume is equal to the rate at which mass is passing through the surface from outside to inside, minus the rate at which mass is passing from inside to outside. This can be expressed as an equation in integral form over the control volume.
The continuum assumption is an idealization of continuum mechanics under which fluids can be treated as continuous, even though, on a microscopic scale, they are composed of molecules. Under the continuum assumption, macroscopic (observed/measurable) properties such as density, pressure, temperature, and bulk velocity are taken to be well-defined at "infinitesimal" volume elements—small in comparison to the characteristic length scale of the system, but large in comparison to molecular length scale
Passenger car unit (PCU) of a vehicle type depends on vehicular characteristics, stream characteristics, roadway characteristics, environmental factors, climate conditions and control conditions. Keeping in view various factors affecting PCU, a model was developed taking a volume to capacity ratio and percentage share of particular vehicle type as independent parameters. A microscopic traffic simulation model VISSIM has been used in present study for generating traffic flow data which some time very difficult to obtain from field survey. A comparison study was carried out with the purpose of verifying when the adaptive neuro-fuzzy inference system (ANFIS), artificial neural network (ANN) and multiple linear regression (MLR) models are appropriate for prediction of PCUs of different vehicle types. From the results observed that ANFIS model estimates were closer to the corresponding simulated PCU values compared to MLR and ANN models. It is concluded that the ANFIS model showed greater potential in predicting PCUs from v/c ratio and proportional share for all type of vehicles whereas MLR and ANN models did not perform well.
In tube drawing process, a tube is pulled out through a die and a plug to reduce its diameter and thickness as per the requirement. Dimensional accuracy of cold drawn tubes plays a vital role in the further quality of end products and controlling rejection in manufacturing processes of these end products. Springback phenomenon is the elastic strain recovery after removal of forming loads, causes geometrical inaccuracies in drawn tubes. Further, this leads to difficulty in achieving close dimensional tolerances. In the present work springback of EN 8 D tube material is studied for various cold drawing parameters. The process parameters in this work include die semi-angle, land width and drawing speed. The experimentation is done using Taguchi’s L36 orthogonal array, and then optimization is done in data analysis software Minitab 17. The results of ANOVA shows that 15 degrees die semi-angle,5 mm land width and 6 m/min drawing speed yields least springback. Furthermore, optimization algorithms named Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO), Simulated Annealing (SA) and Genetic Algorithm (GA) are applied which shows that 15 degrees die semi-angle, 10 mm land width and 8 m/min drawing speed results in minimal springback with almost 10.5 % improvement. Finally, the results of experimentation are validated with Finite Element Analysis technique using ANSYS.
Lidar for Autonomous Driving, LiDAR Mapping for Driverless Cars.pptxRishavKumar530754
LiDAR-Based System for Autonomous Cars
Autonomous Driving with LiDAR Tech
LiDAR Integration in Self-Driving Cars
Self-Driving Vehicles Using LiDAR
LiDAR Mapping for Driverless Cars
Value Stream Mapping Worskshops for Intelligent Continuous SecurityMarc Hornbeek
This presentation provides detailed guidance and tools for conducting Current State and Future State Value Stream Mapping workshops for Intelligent Continuous Security.
"Boiler Feed Pump (BFP): Working, Applications, Advantages, and Limitations E...Infopitaara
A Boiler Feed Pump (BFP) is a critical component in thermal power plants. It supplies high-pressure water (feedwater) to the boiler, ensuring continuous steam generation.
⚙️ How a Boiler Feed Pump Works
Water Collection:
Feedwater is collected from the deaerator or feedwater tank.
Pressurization:
The pump increases water pressure using multiple impellers/stages in centrifugal types.
Discharge to Boiler:
Pressurized water is then supplied to the boiler drum or economizer section, depending on design.
🌀 Types of Boiler Feed Pumps
Centrifugal Pumps (most common):
Multistage for higher pressure.
Used in large thermal power stations.
Positive Displacement Pumps (less common):
For smaller or specific applications.
Precise flow control but less efficient for large volumes.
🛠️ Key Operations and Controls
Recirculation Line: Protects the pump from overheating at low flow.
Throttle Valve: Regulates flow based on boiler demand.
Control System: Often automated via DCS/PLC for variable load conditions.
Sealing & Cooling Systems: Prevent leakage and maintain pump health.
⚠️ Common BFP Issues
Cavitation due to low NPSH (Net Positive Suction Head).
Seal or bearing failure.
Overheating from improper flow or recirculation.
15. What is
DevOps?
o DevOps is a culture movement that
encourages great collaboration (teamwork)
to maintain building more quality software
more quickly with more reliability.
16. What is
DevOps
NOT?
o A role, person or organization
o Something only administrators do
o Something only developers do
o Tools
18. DevOps
Goals
o The goal of DevOps is very simple; it is to
make a company more money. list the
following reasons for adopting DevOps
practices:
- Increases net profit.
- Increases return on investment.
- Increases cash flow.
19. Advantage
of DevOps
o Removing barriers to getting useful
features.
o Removing the bottlenecks, conflicts, and
risk from the lifecycle between business
decision and customer outcome.
o The DevOps focus on fast deployment,
continual improvement, and automation
naturally forces collaboration with security
teams.
o Increased time efficiencies.
20. Advantage
of DevOps
o Ability to Identify, Respond and Improve
Business Needs.
o Movement Comes from Open Source.
o Covers the *entire* Application Life Cycle.
o Faster time to market.
o Putting control back into the hands of the
business.
o Smooth deployment for new features
21. Disadvantage
of DevOps
o Tools are brand new to the market or are
open-sourced.
o Relying on an external Infrastructure as a
Service (IaaS) or Platform as a Service
(PaaS) provider. This reliance reduces
control and visibility at the hardware and
network layers.
o Complicate the tracking of hardware
assets over time.
22. DevOps
and Agile
That's fundamentally not true as well.
DevOps is actually highly related to Agile
development processes. So, as we can see,
Agile introduced the concept that we need
to iterate in software development, that
we need to move through our cycles in an
iterative fashion, that we need to have
incremental changes and adapt and react
to change quickly and flexibly to make
o DevOps is Agile:
23. DevOps
and Agile
o DevOps is an Extension of Agile
Thinking?
the DevOps answer to that was to embed
operations into the development process.
Take experts from the operations teams and
put them into the product team. Make them
involved in every decision.
And when DevOps came on the scene, the
primary idea was remarkably similar, to
embrace constant delivery, to embrace
testing, to embrace operations.
24. o Operations
IT operations include system administrators,
database administrators, network engineers,
infrastructure architects, and support
personnel.
DevOps
and Agile
31. Testing is a critical part of the handoff between
development and IT operations. Successful Agile
teams using DevOps practices fully integrate testing
into their software development lifecycle.
How
Testing
Fits into
the
DevOps
Toolchain
32. A test-driven development system creates confidence
that when all of the automated tests pass, the code is
good to go. Successful DevOps toolchains include a
fully automated test harness that can signal to both
development and IT operations teams when code
that’s in development and code on running systems is
passing (or failing) their tests.
How
Testing
Fits into
the
DevOps
Toolchain
33. o
o bring in talented testers.
o then deploy them wisely.
o Make sure they test API services for business logic
and processes to maximize the benefits of
automation.
Improve
testing
inside
your
Agile
environ
ment
36. »Difficult to integrate tools
»Less interest in learning each others
tools
»Different implementation of similar
tools
Why
DevOps?
Confusion
37. Development Operations
Sends out files
based on
requirements
Manually hacks the scripts
received and changes the
configuration files to reflect
changes in production which
could potentially lead to an issue.Why
DevOps?
During Deployment
39. After deployment, QA
sees some anomalies
and raises defects
Developer realizes that
correct files was not
deployed
Operations Development
Why
DevOps?
After Deployment
40. Why
DevOps?
Benefits Of DevOps
o Continuous software delivery
More deploys means faster time-to-market
and continual improvement.
o More stable operating environments
You don’t have to choose stability versus new
features.
A single team is responsible for delivering new
features and stability.
41. Why
DevOps?
Benefits Of DevOps
o Less complex problems to fix
Because change sets are smaller.
o Faster resolution of problems
Because team members don’t need to wait
for a different team to troubleshoot and fix
the problem.